Web CMS: mediasiteQ

Keeping web sites in step with the news

News sites aren’t bank sites. We shouldn’t look the same every day. Instead of being locked into a format that is the same as everyone else, mediasiteQ let’s you flex your site to fit the news, not the other way around.

Using our page buildinG, CMS module, you can drag and drop stories or ads, reshape content and package news or ads together.

In a few clicks, you can move ads, change the layout, resize the photo and more. Change the number of ads and stories and emphasize content dynamically.

We'll blow the doors off your current web site!

Switch your web site in just a few mouse clicks

We got into the software business in 2004 because we felt the web software our consulting clients were dealing with was complex, limiting and inflexible. We knew newspapers needed better solutions to survive and thrive.

Our goals were straightforward:• Create software that is non-technical and easy-to-use. Take the mystique away from running a web site.• Create a web CMS that is flexible and can easily reflect the news. Make web news display as flexible as print design.• Bring relevant print design concepts like story packaging and relationships to the web. • Build powerful self-service and user-contribution platforms because interactivity is critical.• Provide for an easy flow of content between print and digital workflows.• Make mobile and video native and easy.• Develop solutions no one else is providing. Find new answers.• Make excellence affordable.

We think you will love what we’ve done. Let us show you the future of the web.

• Non-technical technology. Easier to learn and run.• More open and accessible code and templates.• Integration with any system or workflow.• Reverse publishing.• Dramatically more flexible. You can design and build landing pages in minutes.• Control over navigation and categories.

Renamed The Rhode Island Catholic, the redesign launched on an accellerated schedule requested by Bishop Thomas J. Tobin, who had recently been named to the post. He thought the name change needed to be made as soon as possible. The print redesign was followed by the launch of a new web site two months later.